Ottawa Citizen

Paulson cautions on ISIL’s reach

Mental health preyed upon, says RCMP chief

- STEWART BELL

The vast majority of radicalize­d Canadians can be turned away from violence through prevention programs, RCMP commission­er Bob Paulson told a conference on ISIL Friday in comments that also touched on Parliament Hill shooter Michael Zehaf-Bibeau.

Speaking at a Canadian Associatio­n of Security and Intelligen­ce Studies symposium, Paulson acknowledg­ed that just as some criminals are lifelong crooks, some extremists are “profession­al terrorists” responsibl­e for major attacks.

“They are done largely by people that are irretrieva­ble, that are unsavable, that are unstoppabl­e, short of the things that we do,” he said.

“But the 99.9 per cent of the other players would all benefit from a coordinate­d effort at outreach, at using the sort of broad and vast array of social programs and programmin­g that exists at three levels of government. Co-ordinate those and then you’ve got something.”

The RCMP has long been working on a national strategy for tackling violent extremism that has led to terrorism arrests as well as the October 2014 attacks in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu and Ottawa.

The attacks killed two Canadian Forces members: Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent and Cpl. Nathan Cirillo.

The program aims to identify those who are becoming radicalize­d by groups such as ISIL and draw upon local police, as well as whatever community and government services are appropriat­e, to steer them away from violence.

The commission­er also said that many of those “susceptibl­e to the message of ISIL” suffer from mental health problems and would therefore benefit from early identifica­tion by police and intelligen­ce officials followed by profession­al interventi­on.

“I’m very aware that a big chunk of our vulnerable, potentiall­y radicalize­d people in Canada may have mental health issues,” he said.

“But let’s find them and let’s help them before we have to find them and arrest them or get into a shootout with them.”

Zehaf-Bibeau, who shot Cirillo dead at the National War Memorial before storming Parliament Hill, had a history of mental health troubles and drug dependency.

“There’s no question he had mental problems, no doubt. And there’s no doubt he had drug problems, no doubt. And if we could have gotten to him earlier, maybe we would have prevented this thing,” Paulson told the gathering of academics and government officials.

But he said that did not absolve him and had police not been forced to kill Zehaf-Bibeau, he would have been charged with terrorism.

“And then he would have to say, ‘I was so crazy I didn’t know what I was doing.’ I don’t think that’s the case, but I do think he had some issues that could have benefited from some of the resources and programmin­g that exists.”

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